A teenager accused of fatally stabbing a young father was back in court on Thursday on new charges.

Levi Acre-Kendall, 19, of Cambridge, Minnesota was out on bail following an April 14 incident when after arguing for a few hours while out on a fishing trip he allegedly stabbed 34-year-old Peter Kelly.

Kelly died soon after and when Acre-Kendall was released on bond he was told he could have no contact with the two friends he was with on that trip or reach out to the Kelly family.

On May 7, the day he was released, he changed his Twitter profile to be a picture of him and the other two men, and then tweeted; 'If you are praying for me, please keep the Kelly family in mind as well, I never intended for this to happen and I wish it never did.'

Tragedy: Kelly was a 34-year-old married father of five who welcomed a baby girl just one year ago (above)

Acre-Kendall was charged with two counts of felony bail jumping and appeared in Court Thursday, at which point Judge Molly GaleWyrick scheduled a motion hearing on those charges for July 15, and upped his bail from $75,000 to $125,000, with another $20,000 for the bail infraction.

He is now back in jail and is not expected to be able to raise the new amount of $145,000.

'It’s an issue that is probably an area where the law has not necessarily caught up with technology,' Eric Nelson, the defendant's attorney argued according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

'I don’t think there was any nefarious intent on Mr. Acre-Kendall’s part to violate the terms of the bail.'

He then added; 'I think that in the modern age, that this is the normal thing that kids do.'

Members of Kelly's family did not feel the same way however, taking issue with not only that tweet but another in which Acre-Kendall wrote; 'Going to Chipotle to gain back 15 pounds I lost.'

Furthermore, the two men who he put into his new profile photo acknowledged that they still followed the defendant on the social media network and saw his tweets.

Poor choice: Acre-Kendall, 19, was released on bail May 7 following the incident which happened on the St. Crix River (above), and that same day tweeted about his victim's family

Trouble: 'If you are praying for me, please keep the Kelly family in mind as well, I never intended for this to happen and I wish it never did,' wrote the teen (left) about Kelly's (right) death

The fatal incident on April 14 began after Acre-Kendall and his two friends were allegedly smoking marijuana and cursing on the St. Croix River.

Kelly and his Ross Lechman were fishing on the Minnesota side of the river when they heard the teens over on the Wisconsin side.

Over the next few hours they asked Acre-Kendall and his friends to tone things down, and eventually drove over to have a talk with the young men.

Accounts differ about what happened next, but according to court papers Lechman said that Acre-Kendall produced a knife and proceeded to stab Kelly.

Kelly, whose child are all under the age of 9, was pronounced dead by the time he reached St Croix Regional Medical Center.

Acre-Kendall's mother blamed the victim in an interview shortly after, saying; 'All I can tell you is that it would have never happened if it weren't for those two older men coming to the boys, because the boys were just fishing.

'Levi's a good kid. He was just fishing.'

Kelly was a beloved member of the community, remembered by friends as getting up at 4am to get to work so he could be time in home to coach the local high school's football, baseball and wrestling teams.

'He worked 10 to 12 hours a day at Andersen Windows, and he would come home and volunteer four hours a night to our wrestling program for four or five months a year,' his fellow high school coach and friend Dan Clark told Fox 9 shortly after the tragic incident.

'He was one of the greatest human beings that I ever hoped to meet.'

He leaves behind his wife Christie; sons , Kellen, Payton, Miles and August; and a baby girl Molly who was born just last year.